Lenin had hoped to cement connections between …

Years: 1897 - 1897

Lenin had hoped to cement connections between his Social-Democrats and Emancipation of Labor, a group of Russian Marxist émigrés based in Switzerland; he had visited the country to meet group members Plekhanov and Pavel Axelrod.

He proceeded to Paris to meet Marx's son-in-law Paul Lafargue and to research the Paris Commune of 1871, which he considers an early prototype for a proletarian government.

Financed by his mother, he stayed in a Swiss health spa before traveling to Berlin, where he studied for six weeks at the Staatsbibliothek and met the Marxist activist Wilhelm Liebknecht.

Returning to Russia with a stash of illegal revolutionary publications, he travels to various cities distributing literature to striking workers.

While involved in producing a news sheet, Rabochee delo ("Workers' Cause"), he is among forty activists arrested in St. Petersburg and charged with sedition.

Refused legal representation or bail, Lenin denies all charges against him but remains imprisoned for a year before sentencing.

He spends this time theorizing and writing.

In this work he notes that the rise of industrial capitalism in Russia has caused large numbers of peasants to move to the cities, where they form a proletariat.

From his Marxist perspective, Lenin argues that this Russian proletariat will develop class consciousness, which will in turn lead them to violently overthrow Tsarism, the aristocracy, and the bourgeoisie and to establish a proletariat state that will move toward socialism.

In February 1897, he is sentenced without trial to three years' exile in eastern Siberia.

He is granted a few days in Saint Petersburg to put his affairs in order and uses this time to meet with the Social-Democrats, who have renamed themselves the League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class.

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